Uplink and downlink control signaling in wireless networks

ABSTRACT

Embodiments of the present invention provide for downlink and uplink control feedback signaling. Other embodiments may be described and claimed.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional ApplicationNo. 60/784,418, filed on Mar. 20, 2006. The specification of saidprovisional application is hereby incorporated in its entirety, exceptfor those sections, if any, that are inconsistent with thisspecification.

FIELD

Embodiments of the present invention relate to the field of wirelessnetworks, and more particularly, to providing uplink and downlinkcontrol signaling in said wireless networks.

BACKGROUND

Multi-carrier communications systems use symbol-modulated sub-carriersto communicate. Changing channel conditions, including frequencyselective fading, may provide challenges to providing uplink anddownlink transmissions to users in the system with desired communicationefficiencies.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Embodiments of the present invention will be readily understood by thefollowing detailed description in conjunction with the accompanyingdrawings. To facilitate this description, like reference numeralsdesignate like structural elements. Embodiments of the invention areillustrated by way of example and not by way of limitation in thefigures of the accompanying drawings.

FIG. 1 illustrates a wireless communication system in accordance withvarious embodiments of the present invention;

FIG. 2 illustrates a flowchart of a resource allocation algorithm inaccordance with various embodiments of the present invention;

FIG. 3 illustrates a flowchart of another resource allocation algorithmin accordance with various embodiments of the present invention;

FIG. 4 illustrates a wireless communication node in accordance withvarious embodiments of the present invention;

FIG. 5 illustrates another wireless communication node in accordancewith various embodiments of the present invention;

FIG. 6 illustrates a flowchart of a channel condition report inaccordance with various embodiments of the present invention; and

FIG. 7 illustrates a flowchart of a reporting mode sequence inaccordance with various embodiments of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION

In the following detailed description, reference is made to theaccompanying drawings which form a part hereof wherein like numeralsdesignate like parts throughout, and in which is shown by way ofillustration embodiments in which the invention may be practiced. It isto be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structuralor logical changes may be made without departing from the scope of thepresent invention. Therefore, the following detailed description is notto be taken in a limiting sense, and the scope of embodiments inaccordance with the present invention is defined by the appended claimsand their equivalents.

Various operations may be described as multiple discrete operations inturn, in a manner that may be helpful in understanding embodiments ofthe present invention; however, the order of description should not beconstrued to imply that these operations are order dependent.

For the purposes of the present invention, the phrase “A and/or B” means“(A), (B), or (A and B).” For the purposes of the present invention, thephrase “A, B, and/or C” means “(A), (B), (C), (A and B), (A and C), (Band C), or (A, B and C).”

The description may use the phrases “in an embodiment,” or “inembodiments,” which may each refer to one or more of the same ordifferent embodiments. Furthermore, the terms “comprising,” “including,”“having,” and the like, as used with respect to embodiments of thepresent invention, are synonymous.

FIG. 1 illustrates a wireless communication system 100 in accordancewith an embodiment of this invention. In this embodiment, thecommunication system 100 is shown with nodes 104, 108, and 112communicatively coupled to one another via a shared wireless medium 116.The nodes 104, 108, and 112 may access the shared wireless medium 116,hereinafter “medium 116,” through antenna structures 120, 124, and 128,respectively.

Each of the antenna structures 120, 124, and 128 may have one or moreantennas, e.g., three antennas as shown, for wireless communication viathe common wireless medium 116. In various embodiments, any number ofantennas may be employed. The antennas employed in the antennastructures 120, 124, and 128 may be directional or omnidirectionalantennas, including, e.g., dipole antennas, monopole antennas, patchantennas, loop antennas, microstrip antennas or any other type ofantenna suitable for transmission of radio frequency (RF) signals.

A link utilizing one transmit antenna (at a transmitting node) and onereceive antenna (at a receiving node) may be referred to as asingle-input, single-output link. A link utilizing more than onetransmit and receive antennas may be referred to as a multiple-input,multiple-output (MIMO) link. A multi-antenna node may transmitinformation via the medium 116 over one or more spatial channels. Amulti-antenna node may form up to as many spatial channels as it hasantennas. For example, node 104 may form one, two, or three spatialchannels for transmitting information over the medium 116.

The nodes 104, 108, and 112 may be any physical or logical entity forcommunicating information in the communication system 100 and may beimplemented as hardware, software, or any combination thereof, asdesired for a given set of design parameters or performance constraints.Although FIG. 1 may show a limited number of nodes by way of example, itcan be appreciated that more or less nodes may be employed for a givenimplementation.

In various embodiments, the communication system 100 may be a radioaccess network compatible with the Universal Mobile Telephone System(UMTS) along with any revisions, amendments, or updates thereto(including, but not limited to, those resulting from the Seventh Releaseof the Technical Report produced by Third Generation Partnership Project(“3GPP”), 3GPP TR 25.814 V7.1.0 (2006-09)).

In various embodiments, the nodes 108 and 112 may be user equipment (UE)implemented in, e.g., a mobile computer, a personal digital assistant, amobile phone, etc., and node 104, which may also be referred to as anode-B, may be implemented in a base transceiver station (BTS).

The node 104 may be arranged to communicate information over the medium116 to and/or from the nodes 108 and 112. This information may includemedia information and/or control information. Media informationgenerally may refer to any data representing content meant for a user,such as image information, video information, graphical information,audio information, voice information, textual information, numericalinformation, alphanumeric symbols, character symbols, and so forth.Control information generally may refer to any data representingcommands, instructions or control words meant for an automated system.For example, control information may be used to route media informationthrough a system, instruct a node to process the media information in acertain manner, or to communicate state information of a network to anode.

Transmissions in the direction of the nodes 108 and 112 to the node 104may be referred to as an uplink transmission, while transmissions in theopposite direction may be referred to as a downlink transmission. Theseair interfaces may be compatible with UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access(UTRA) and/or Evolved—UTRA (E-UTRA) technologies. In some embodiments,downlink modulation schemes may be of a first type, e.g., orthogonalfrequency division multiple access (OFDMA), while uplink modulationschemes may be of a second type, e.g., single carrier frequency divisionmultiple access (FDMA).

In some embodiments downlink information may be transmitted over themedium 116 as multiple OFDM symbols spread over multiple sub-carriers,with adjacent sub-carriers being orthogonal to one another. Thetransmitted information may be organized into physical resource elements(“PREs”) of a given channel. A PRE may be composed one or moresub-carriers, which may be arranged as a resource block including Lconsecutive sub-carriers and M time/frequency symbols. L and M may beany positive integers. The information to be transmitted may beinitially arranged as one or more virtual resource elements (VREs), withthe size of the VREs corresponding to the size of the PREs. The VREs maythen be assigned to PREs for transmission according to allocationschemes described with reference to various embodiments of the presentinvention.

In some embodiments a localized transmission mode (LTM) may provide thatinformation transmitted from a node-B, e.g., node 104, to a particularUE, e.g., node 108, may be confined to a set of resource blocks, and,for each sub-frame, a resource block is assigned for transmission to asingle UE. In some embodiments, the resource blocks selected fortransmission may be selected by the node 104 based on knowledge ofinstantaneous channel conditions (a.k.a. channel-dependent scheduling).

Channel-dependent scheduling may help to combat frequency-selectivefading on the channel; however, it may not be available and/or desirablein all situations. For example, if the node 108 is highly mobile (e.g.,is traveling in a vehicle) it may be difficult to track instantaneouschannel conditions. For another example, if the information is beingbroadcast to more than one UE, e.g., node 108 and node 112,channel-dependent scheduling to exploit a particular UE's channel maynot be possible.

When channel-dependent scheduling is not available or is not desirable,it may be desirable to increase frequency diversity. Frequency diversitymay be attained in LTM by distributing the VREs on resource blocks thatare spaced a sufficient distance from one another within the sub-frame.This distribution may work well when the amount of information to betransmitted (e.g., the payload) is sufficient to fill multiple resourceblocks.

If, on the other hand, the amount of information to be transmitted isnot sufficient to fill multiple resource blocks, distributing theinformation over multiple resource blocks may result in portions of thetransmitting bandwidth being wasted. Accordingly, for transmittinginformation with relatively small payloads, a distributed transmissionmode (“DTM”) may be employed. A DTM may provide for the distribution ofpayloads for multiple UEs over multiple resource blocks. Thus, in a DTM,a single resource block may include information being transmitted tomore than one UE.

In embodiments of the present invention, both DTM and LTM transmissionsmay be multiplexed together in a frequency division multiplexing (“FDM”)manner in a downlink from node 104 to node 108 and/or node. Theallocation of PREs to localized users (e.g., UEs to which an LTMtransmission is directed) may be done first to exploit multi-userdiversity. Next, the remaining PREs (either a fixed fraction of theoverall resource elements, or a dynamically varying fraction) may beallocated among the distributed users (e.g., UEs to which a DTMtransmission is directed).

A VRE to be mapped to a PRE of a resource block assigned for localizedtransmission may be referred to as a localized VRE (“LVRE”); while a VREto be mapped to a PRE of a resource block assigned for distributedtransmission may be referred to as a distributed VRE (“DVRE”).

Mapping DVREs to PREs may be relatively straightforward when each of theusers' resource requirements is the same. As used herein, a user'sresource requirement may be the amount of resource elements desired fortransmitting relevant information to UE in the downlink transmission. Auser's resource requirements may be expressed, and initially arranged,as a number of DVREs. The number of DVREs to satisfy a user's resourcerequirement may sometimes be referred to as a distributed virtualresource block (DVRB). When the users' resource requirements aredifferent (resulting in a different number of DVREs (or a differentsized DVRB) for each user) the distribution becomes more involved.

Accordingly, embodiments of the present invention, to be described infurther detail below, enable a transmitting node, e.g., a node-B, to mapinformation for distributed users to PREs given the possibility ofunequal resource requirements.

In this embodiment, let the different resource requirements for Kdifferent users be denoted as l_(k), k=1, . . . , K. Thus, the totalnumber of required resource elements (N_(RE)) may be given by:$\begin{matrix}{N_{RE} = {\sum\limits_{k = 1}^{K}{l_{k}.}}} & {{EQ}.\quad 1}\end{matrix}$

In this embodiment, it may be assumed that the number of requiredresource elements, N_(RE), is equal to the number of PREs available forDTM in the sub-frame, N_(PRE). While embodiments described herein maydiscuss the time unit of the wireless channel as a sub-frame, otherembodiments may utilize other time units, e.g., one or more OFDMsymbols. The following description provides instruction for mapping aset of DVREs to the N_(PRE) PREs.

In various embodiments, the N_(PRE) PREs may be distributed over theentire band, over certain blocks of sub-carriers, or by a hybrid of theprevious two. In all of these cases, an ordered set of resource elementindices for PREs allocated for DVREs may be extracted, and, without lossof generality, form a unique mapping to the set of PREs {S_(i)=i, i=1,2, . . . , N_(RE)}.

This set of PREs, S_(i), may be mapped to DVREs of the different users,V_(k)(j), to satisfy respective requirements, {l_(k)}. The resourceallocation that results in the largest average spacing between adjacentPREs for all users may be chosen to provide for desired frequencydiversity for the entire set of users allocated these DVREs subject tothe resource constraints.

When the resource requirements for all users are identical, e.g.,I_(k)=I for all k=1, . . . , K, the mapping that results may beV_(k)(j)=S_(k+(j−1)K), k=1, . . . , K and j=1, . . . , I.

In the general case when the resource requirements of the differentusers are unequal, the desired mapping may provide for the PREs that areevenly distributed across all users. A measure for the evenness of theresource element spacing for the k^(th) user may be defined in terms ofthe deviation from the mean spacing, e.g.,: $\begin{matrix}{{e_{k} = {\sum\limits_{i = 2}^{l_{k}}{{{d_{k}(i)} - {\overset{\_}{d}}_{k}}}^{\gamma}}},} & {{EQ}.\quad 2}\end{matrix}$

where d _(k)=N_(sc)/l_(k) is the mean spacing between resource elementsfor the k^(th) user, d_(k)(i)=V_(k)(i)−V_(k)(i−1) is the spacing of thei^(th) resource element for the k^(th) user, and γ=1 or 2 (although γmay be any positive number). The resource allocation algorithm may thenseek to assign the resource elements among the different users in such away that the metric $\begin{matrix}{{m = {\sum\limits_{k = 1}^{K}e_{k}}},} & {{EQ}.\quad 3}\end{matrix}$

is minimized over all distributions.

FIG. 2 illustrates a flowchart of a resource allocation algorithm 200that seeks to distribute resources in a manner to provide a desiredmeasure of evenness and/or spacing between adjacent assigned resourceelements in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

In block 204, the distributed users may be sorted in order according totheir resource requirements such that I₁≧I₂≧ . . . ≧I_(K). This sortingoperation may not be performed in some embodiments.

In block 208, a calculation index, n, may be set to 1.

In block 212, a set of resource element indices may be computed. In anembodiment these indices may be computed by the following equation:$\begin{matrix}{{q_{i} = {{in}\left( {\frac{i}{l_{n}}{\sum\limits_{k = n}^{K}l_{k}}} \right)}},{i = 1},\ldots\quad,l_{n},} & {{EQ}.\quad 4}\end{matrix}$

wherein in(.) is an integer function, e.g., ceil(.) (which rounds thevalue up to the nearest integer); round(.) (which rounds the value tothe nearest integer); or floor(.) (which rounds the value down to thenearest integer).

In block 216, a set of resource elements may then be assigned to then^(th) user with requirement I_(n) by {V_(n)(i)=S_(qi)}.

In block 220, the set of resource elements assigned to the n^(th) userin block 216 may be removed from available resource elements, {S_(i)},to form the updated set of resource elements remaining to be assigned.After the update, the remaining elements may be renumbered sequentially(i.e. 1,2, . . . ) to allow EQ. 4 to work for the next round ofiteration.

In block 224, the calculation index, n, may be compared to the totalnumber of distributed users, K, to determine whether resourceassignments have been performed for all of the distributed users. Ifnot, the process may proceed to block 228, where the calculation indexis incremented, and then back to block 212.

If resource assignments have been performed for all of the distributedusers, the process may proceed to block 232. In block 232, S_(i) (mappedinto V_(k)(i) in block 216) may be related back to the original resourceelement indices, which may be potentially distributed in chunks acrossthe total bandwidth.

In the above algorithm, it is assumed that N_(PRE)=N_(RE); however, inmany embodiments N_(PRE) may be greater than N_(RE). Accordingly, insome embodiments, the mapping algorithm described above may be modifiedto account for the extra resource elements. For example, a dummy usermay be introduced into the mapping along with the real distributedusers. The dummy user may be assigned a resource requirement, I_(dummy),equal to the difference between the number of available resourceelements, N_(PRE), and the number of required resource elements, N_(RE).That is, I_(dummy)=N_(PRE)−N_(RE).

The dummy user and its associated resource requirement may be includedin the algorithm described in FIG. 2, making the total user set equal toK plus one. Once the mapping is complete, the resource allocated to thedummy user, which may be unused, may add to the spacing between theassigned resource elements of the real users.

In an embodiment, the dummy user may be placed into at the beginning ofthe sorted order of users, e.g., in block 204, regardless of itsrequirement. This may provide the initial, n=1, distribution to beprovided to the dummy user, with the remaining active allocations beinginterspersed throughout the other PREs. The dummy user may be appendedto the ended of the sorted order of users.

Having extra resource elements may be accounted for in other ways inother embodiments. For example, in another embodiment a spacing factor,S, may be used to adequately spread the resource elements of thedistributed users over the available PREs.

In this embodiment, the set of available PREs may be defined as S_(i)=i,i=1, 2, . . . , N_(PRE), where N_(PRE)≧N_(RE). The spacing factor, S,may be defined as follows:S=┌N _(PRB) /N _(RE)┐.  EQ. 5.

FIG. 3 illustrates a flowchart of a resource allocation algorithm 300that seeks to provide a resource allocation accounting for extraavailable PREs utilizing this spacing factor in accordance with anembodiment of the present invention.

In block 304, similar to block 204, the distributed users may be sortedaccording to their resource requirements such that I₁≧I₂≧ . . . ≧I_(K).

In block 308, similar to block 208, a calculation index, n, may be setto 1.

In block 312, a spacing function, j, may be defined by the followingequation: $\begin{matrix}{{j = \begin{Bmatrix}{{i \cdot S},{i = 1},\ldots\quad,\left\lceil {N_{PRE}/S} \right\rceil} \\{{{{mod}\left( {{{i \cdot S} - 1},N_{PRE}} \right)} + 1},{i > \left\lceil {N_{PRE}/S} \right\rceil}}\end{Bmatrix}},{i = 1},\ldots\quad,l_{n},} & {{EQ}.\quad 6}\end{matrix}$

In block 316, a set of indices, q_(i), may be computed. In an embodimentthese indices, q_(i), may be computed by the following equation:$\begin{matrix}{{q_{i} = {{in}\left( {\frac{j}{l_{n}}{\sum\limits_{k = n}^{K}l_{k}}} \right)}},{i = 1},\ldots\quad,l_{n},} & {{EQ}.\quad 7}\end{matrix}$

and further modify the set of indices as follows:q _(i)=mod(q _(i)−1, N _(PRE))+1.  EQ. 8

In block 320, the set of resource elements may be assigned to the n_(th)user with requirement I_(n) by {V_(n)(i)=S_(qi)}.

In block 324, the set of resource elements assigned to the n_(th) userin block 320 may be removed from available resource elements, {S_(i)},to form the updated set of resource elements remaining to be assigned.N_(PRE) may be updated to reflect the reduced number of availableresource elements. The updated N_(PRE) may be used in EQ. 6 to compute jfor a different i.

In block 328, similar to block 224, the calculation index, n, may becompared to the total number of distributed users, K, to determinewhether resource assignments have been performed for all of thedistributed users. If not, the process may proceed to block 332, wherethe calculation index n is incremented, and then back to block 312.

If resource assignments have been performed for all of the distributedusers, the process may proceed to block 336. In block 336, S_(i) (mappedinto V_(k)(i) in block 320) may be related back to the original resourceelement indices, which may be potentially distributed in chunks acrossthe total bandwidth.

In some embodiments, particularly in the case of grouped approach tomapping of distributed users, downlink performance may be furtherimproved through frequency diversity and interference randomization byvarying the mapping in the time domain, e.g., every symbol.

For example, as discussed above, once the resource mapping for thelocalized users has been determined, the next phase may be to computethe resource mapping for the distributed users, e.g., as described inFIG. 2 and associated discussion. This mapping may determine the initialallocation pattern for that scheduling unit, e.g., for a 0.5 millisecondsub-frame or one OFDM symbol. In an embodiment, a mapping schemeemployed in a subsequent scheduling unit, e.g., the next sub-frame, maybe a variation of the initial mapping scheme. For example, a subsequentmapping scheme may be varied from the previous mapping scheme by acyclical shift, e.g., the initial mapping is cyclically shifted modulothe number of physical resource elements N_(PRE) by one or more units;by reversal, e.g., the initial mapping may be reversed in the frequencydomain; or by a combination of a cyclical shift and reversal.

These techniques may help to improve the performance of the groupedapproach in the case of the distributed users and leverage some of thebenefits of the scattered approach.

FIG. 4 illustrates a node 400 in accordance with an embodiment of thepresent invention. The node 400 may be similar to, and substantiallyinterchangeable with, the node 104 shown and described above. In thisembodiment, the node 400 may include transmit circuitry 404 coupled toan antenna structure 408, which may be similar to the antenna structure120. The transmit circuitry 404 may include one or more transmit chainsto transmit information over one or more spatial channels.

The node 400 may also include receive circuitry 412 coupled to theantenna structure 120. Similar to the transmit circuitry 404, thereceive circuitry may include one or more receive chains to receiveinformation over one or more spatial channels.

The node 400 may further include a scheduler 416 coupled to the transmitcircuitry 404 and to the receive circuitry 412. The scheduler 416 mayperform the various resource allocation mapping and assignmentsdiscussed above in accordance with various embodiments of the invention.

The transmit circuitry 404 may receive information 420 to be transmittedto a plurality of users; receive assignments of available resources fromthe scheduler 416, and map the information onto the available resources.The transmit circuitry 404 may then cause the information to betransmitted over the antenna structure 408.

As discussed above, assignments of transmissions to localized users maybe done in accordance with channel-dependent scheduling. Accordingly, insome embodiments, the scheduler 416 may be coupled to the receivecircuitry 412 to receive uplink feedback from users (e.g., controlinformation in an uplink transmission) on current channel conditions tofacilitate channel dependent scheduling.

In embodiments where the node 400 is a multi-antenna node, the uplinkfeedback may include pre-coding information. Pre-coding information maybe indices that are transmitted by a UE, e.g., node 108, to a node-B,e.g., node 420. The node 420, and in particular, the scheduler 416, mayreceive the indices and access a codebook 424 to select beam-formingvectors to be used in the downlink to the node 108 that accounts for theinstantaneous channel conditions. With proper coding of the uplinkfeedback channel, the probability of the uplink feedback being corruptedmay be small. In the event of corruption, the desired beam-formingvectors may be recovered either by blind detection methods, where thenode 108 performs a codebook search, or by the convergence of trackingcodebooks, especially for low-mobility channels. In addition, for highlymobile UEs, the use of dedicated mid-amble sequences may also be used tovalidate beam-forming vectors.

In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the node 108may transmit uplink feedback in a transmission that occurs on a firstband of frequencies. The scheduler 416 may receive this uplink feedbackand perform a validation of the control information contained therein.The scheduler 416 may then cause an indication of the validation to betransmitted in a downlink transmission back to the node 108. Thevalidation may be transmitted in a downlink that is in a band offrequencies other than the band used for the uplink feedback. Thisout-band control signal may avoid the use of mid-amble sequences in thecase of high mobility UEs.

The uplink feedback may have a block code or cyclical redundancy check(CRC) with error detection capabilities in order to facilitate thevalidation.

In some embodiments, the out-band control signal may also include hybridautomatic repeat request (ARQ) feedback.

In some embodiments, the scheduler 416 may also determine feedback ratesfor channel state information. The node 400 may use the uplink channelto estimate Doppler spread (or inter-carrier interference (ICI) level)and adjust the subcarrier spacing in the downlink to mitigate ICI. Thenode 400 may additionally/alternatively conduct link and rank adaptationaccording to the (variation rate or) Doppler spread. In this case,unlike the previous, the transmitter tries to compensate the loss due toDoppler for the receiver. For example, the transmitter at node 400 mayreduce modulation order and code rate if the Doppler spread increasesbecause the Doppler spread affects the channel estimation at thereceiver.

By doing these techniques, the scheduler 416 may exploit the reciprocityof the time variation between the uplink and downlink channels. Namely,although the channel response in frequency division duplexing (FDD) maynot be reciprocal, the Doppler spread (or time variation rates) maystill be the same between downlink and uplink, where the time variationis due to mobility of the UE or medium variation in the propagationpath.

In some embodiments, these techniques may be extended to sometime-division duplexing (TDD) cases where channel reciprocity does notexist. For example, the effective downlink channel includes the transmitchain of node 400 and a receive chain of a UE, while the uplink channelincludes a transmit chain of the UE and the receive chain of the node400. Because the chains have active components the effective channel maynot be reciprocal. For another example, a UE may have more receivechains (or antennas) than transmit chains and the effective channel maynot be reciprocal because some of the UE's receive antennas may not besounded in the uplink. In such TDD cases, the channel reciprocity maynot exist, but the variation reciprocity still holds.

While properly timed feedback may facilitate achieving the benefitsprovided by these techniques, improperly timed feedback may negate them.For example, if the feedback is not sent in a timely manner, the node400 may only use the previously received feedbacks to conductbeamforming and/or link/rank adaptation. The previous feedback may beoutdated if the channel changes too fast and the feedback delay may thencancel out the gain of beamforming. For example, the previous fed backbeamforming vector points to 30 degrees while the ideal currentbeamforming angle may be 60 degrees. If the beamforming error 30=60−30degree cancels out the beamforming gain, then the feedback rate shouldbe increased. For the case of MCS feedback, the outdated feedback canreduce the gain of link adaptation or even cause the link bedisconnected.

Accordingly, to facilitate these techniques, embodiments of the presentinvention may provide for the scheduler 416 to determine how often theUE should feedback channel state information. This may be done by thefollowing process.

The scheduler 416 may receive a signal from a UE, via the receivecircuitry 412, in an uplink. The scheduler may then estimate the timevariation (or Doppler spread) in the received signal. The scheduler 416may determine the feedback rate of the channel state information such asbeamforming matrix, channel quality indicator (CQI) report, and/ormodulation and coding scheme (MCS). The scheduler 416 may then transmitthe rate and other requirements, via the transmit circuitry 404, to theUE. The UE may then feedback information at the specified rate.

FIG. 5 illustrates a node 500 in accordance with an embodiment of thepresent invention. The node 500 may be similar to, and substantiallyinterchangeable with, the nodes 108 and/or 112 shown and describedabove. The node 500 may include transmit circuitry 504 coupled to anantenna structure 508, which may be similar to the antenna structure 124and/or 128. The transmit circuitry 504 may include one or more transmitchains to transmit information over one or more spatial channels.

The node 500 may also include receive circuitry 512 coupled to theantenna structure 508. Similar to the transmit circuitry 504, thereceive circuitry may include one or more receive chains to receiveinformation over one or more spatial channels.

The node 500 may further include a feedback controller 516. The feedbackcontroller 516 may include a channel condition detector 520, coupled tothe receive circuitry 512, and configured to determine a condition ofone or more spatial channels over which information is received. Thefeedback controller 516 may develop a CQI level to indicate thedetermined condition and transmit the CQI level in the uplink feedbackto the node 104.

In various embodiments, the CQI feedback may be used by the node 104 forchannel-dependent scheduling (as discussed above); selection ofmodulation and coding scheme; interference management; and/ortransmission power control for physical channels.

FIG. 6 illustrates a flowchart of a channel condition report 600 inaccordance with an embodiment of the present invention. In thisembodiment, the channel condition detector 520 may cooperate with thereceive circuitry 512 to determine a condition of a channel, block 604.The feedback controller 516 may then develop a CQI value to indicate thedetermined condition, block 608.

The feedback controller 516 may determine if a report is triggered,block 612 and, if so, report the CQI in an uplink feedback, block 616.In embodiments utilizing MIMO transmissions, the amount of CQI feedbackmay vary with the number of channel streams, antenna configurations, andchanging channel conditions. A CQI value may have a variable length toaccount for the varying amount of feedback. Therefore, in addition totransmitting the CQI value itself, the node 500 may also transmit thelength of the CQI value.

If a report is not triggered in block 612, the reporting process mayloop back to block 604. Determining channel condition in block 604 anddeveloping CQI value in block 608 may collectively be referred to asmonitoring the CQI value.

In various embodiments, a report may be triggered in various ways. Forexample, a node-B, e.g., node 104, may periodically schedule an uplinkfeedback for node 500. This schedule may be communicated to the node 500an uplink map broadcast by the node 104. Receiving an indication of thisscheduling may be considered to trigger a CQI report. While periodicreporting may provide for comprehensive channel condition reporting, theoverhead required for this reporting may be unnecessarily burdensome onthe system 100. Therefore, in accordance with embodiments of the presentinvention, an event-driven reporting mode is introduced.

FIG. 7 illustrates a flowchart of a reporting mode sequence 700 inaccordance with various embodiments of the present invention. In thisembodiment, the feedback controller 516 may monitor and report CQIvalues in a non-event driven mode in block 704. In the non-event drivenmode the reports may be triggered, e.g., on a periodic basis. Thefeedback controller 516 may determine whether the CQI value has changedover a predetermined time, T, in block 708. The predetermined time T maybe a configurable value, e.g., a timer could be N*CQI reporting periodinterval during non-event driven mode; where N is an integer. If the CQIvalue has changed over time T, then the feedback controller 516 maycontinue to monitor and report CQI in the non-event driven mode in block704. If the CQI value has not changed over time T, then feedbackcontroller 516 may enter an event-driven CQI reporting mode in block712. While in the event-driven reporting mode the feedback controller516 may monitor CQI values and report the values when certain variancesin the channel conditions are detected, rather than on a periodic basis.The feedback controller 516 may determine whether an event-drivenreporting mode exit event has occurred in block 720. If not, thefeedback controller 516 may continue to monitor and report CQI value inthe event-driven reporting mode. If an exit event does occur, thefeedback controller 516 may loop back to block 704 and revert tomonitoring and reporting CQI values in the non-event driven mode.

In some embodiments, an event-driven reporting mode exit event may occurwhen the channel conditions change within a predetermine interval andthe corresponding CQI value is different from the last reported value.In some embodiments, if the channel changes too often, periodic feedbackmay be more efficient and the detection of the high variation ratetriggers the event to exit the event-driven mode.

In some embodiments, the event-driven reporting mode exit event mayoccur by the feedback controller 516 sending an in-band control signalto the node 104 or by sending a contention-based CQI report (e.g.,transmitting a CQI report during a contention period of an uplinkframe). For the contention-based report, consider an embodiment wherethere are K UEs in the area, and currently L UEs are not in event-drivenreporting mode. In this case, the node 104 may schedule the L UEs forperiodic CQI reporting. In addition, the node 104 may also schedule M(M<K-L) resources in order for the K-L UEs to potentially contend forCQI reporting when they come out of event driven CQI reporting mode. Thecontention may be code-domain based. These contention based reports mayinclude the UE identifier in addition to the CQI report itself. Notethat the value of M compared to K-L may be based on the channelcorrelation between the K-L users.

Once the node 104 receives an in-band signaling message or thecontention based CQI report from the UE, the node 104 may scheduleresources for the UE to send CQI reports in a non-event driven reportingmode.

In some embodiments, the node 104 may predict that a UE will exit anevent driven reporting mode and start scheduling resources for the UE tosend CQI reports. There may be a number of ways that the node 104 maypredict the channel condition changes at the UE (e.g., by detectingchanging channel conditions). In-band signaling or the contention basedCQI reporting may be avoided by the node 104 autonomously performingprediction and assigning the necessary resources for the UE to startsending the CQI report in non event-driven fashion.

In some embodiments, the techniques, or variations thereof, describedabove to exploit the variation reciprocity may be used here for the node104 to schedule feedback modes, e.g., event-driven or periodic, for theUEs.

In some embodiments, an event-driven reporting mode exit event may betimer based. For example, upon entering the event-driven reporting mode,the feedback controller 516 may start a timer. The timer may be resetwhenever the CQI transmission resumes. If the timer expires, the node104 may schedule resources for the node 500 and the feedback controller516 may resume its CQI transmission. Alternatively, it is also possibleto send the timer-based CQI report using in-band signaling. Once the CQIis sent, the feedback controller 516 may go back to event-drivenreporting mode as per the mode entry rule. The value of the timer may beconfigurable by the node 104. If the timer is configured to 0, the eventdriven CQI reporting mode may be disabled.

Although certain embodiments have been illustrated and described hereinfor purposes of description of the preferred embodiment, it will beappreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that a wide variety ofalternate and/or equivalent embodiments or implementations calculated toachieve the same purposes may be substituted for the embodiments shownand described without departing from the scope of the present invention.This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations ofthe embodiments discussed herein. Therefore, it is manifestly intendedthat embodiments in accordance with the present invention be limitedonly by the claims and the equivalents thereof.

1. A method comprising: receiving, in an uplink transmission, controlfeedback from a wireless node in a first band of radio frequencies; andtransmitting a downlink transmission in a second band of radiofrequencies, different from the first band of radio frequencies, saiddownlink transmission including a validation of said received controlfeedback.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein said transmitting of thedownlink transmission includes transmitting a hybrid automatic repeatrequest (ARQ) downlink transmission.
 3. The method of claim 1, whereinthe control feedback includes an error-detection code and the methodfurther comprises: validating the received control feedback based atleast in part on the error-detection code.
 4. The method of claim 1,wherein the control feedback comprises one or more indices and themethod further comprises: selecting a beam-forming vector based at leastin part on the one or more indices; and transmitting another downlinktransmission based at least in part on the selected beam-forming vector.5. A method comprising: determining a condition of a wireless channel;developing a channel quality indicator (CQI) value, having a length, toindicate the determined condition; and transmitting, in an uplinktransmission over a shared wireless medium, the CQI value and thelength.
 6. The method of claim 5, further comprising: developing anotherCQI value of another length that is different from the length; andtransmitting, in another uplink transmission, the another CQI value andthe another length.
 7. The method of claim 5, wherein said determiningand developing comprise monitoring the CQI value and the method furthercomprises: entering an event-driven reporting mode based at least inpart on said monitoring of the CQI.
 8. The method of claim 7, whereinsaid entering an event-driven reporting mode further comprises enteringthe event-driven reporting mode if the CQI value remains unchanged forlonger than a predetermined amount of time.
 9. The method of claim 7,further comprising: exiting the event-driven reporting mode based atleast in part on an amount of time lapsed from a previous CQItransmission and/or a detected change in the CQI.
 10. The method ofclaim 9, wherein said exiting the event-driven reporting mode comprisestransmitting, in an uplink transmission, a message to exit theevent-driven reporting mode.
 11. The method of claim 9, wherein saidexiting the event-driven reporting mode comprises transmitting the CQIvalue and the length in a contention period of an uplink frame.
 12. Themethod of claim 9, wherein said exiting the event-driven reporting modecomprises receiving an indication of resources scheduled for saidtransmitting of the uplink transmission over the shared wireless medium.13. A machine-accessible medium having associated instructions, which,when accessed result in a machine: determining a condition of a wirelesschannel; developing a channel quality indicator (CQI) value, having alength, to indicate the determined condition; and transmitting, in anuplink transmission over a shared wireless medium, the CQI value and thelength.
 14. The machine-accessible medium of claim 13, wherein theassociated instructions, when accessed, further results in the machine:developing another CQI value of another length that is different fromthe length; and transmitting, in another uplink transmission, theanother CQI value and the another length.
 15. The machine-accessiblemedium of claim 13, wherein said determining and developing comprisemonitoring the CQI value and the associated instructions, when accessedfurther results in the machine: triggering an event-driven reportingmode based at least in part on said monitoring of the CQI.
 16. Themachine-accessible medium of claim 15, wherein the associatedinstructions, when accessed, further results in the machine: triggeringthe event-driven reporting mode if the CQI value remains unchanged forlonger than a predetermined amount of time.
 17. The machine-accessiblemedium of claim 15, wherein the associated instructions, when accessed,further results in the machine: exiting the event-driven reporting modebased at least in part on an amount of time lapsed from a previous CQItransmission and/or a detected change in the CQI value.
 18. A systemcomprising: a plurality of substantially omnidirectional antennas toreceive transmissions over a shared wireless medium; and a feedbackcontroller operatively coupled to the plurality of substantiallyomnidirectional antennas and including a channel condition detectorconfigured to determine a condition of a wireless channel, the feedbackcontroller configured to develop a channel quality indicator (CQI)value, having a length, to indicate the determined condition and totransmit, in an uplink transmission via the plurality of substantiallyomnidirectional antennas, the CQI value and the length.
 19. The systemof claim 18, wherein the feedback controller is configured to monitorthe CQI value by controlling said channel condition detector todetermine the condition of the wireless channel and to develop the CQIvalue, wherein the feedback controller is further configured to enter anevent-driven reporting mode based at least in part on the monitored CQIvalue.
 20. The system of claim 18, wherein the feedback controller isfurther configured to exit the event-driven reporting mode based atleast in part on an amount of time lapsed from a previous CQItransmission and/or a detected change in the CQI.